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The Culture of Education
Bruner's 1996 synthesis — the book in which he folded scaffolding, the spiral curriculum, narrative cognition, and meaning-making into a single framework for educational practice, arguing that learning is a culturally embedded act of meaning-making rather than information transfer.
The Culture of Education (Harvard University Press, 1996) is Bruner's mature synthesis — the book that gathered five decades of research into a unified framework for thinking about learning, teaching, and the institutional forms that support them. Its central argument: education is not information transfer but a culturally embedded process of meaning-making, in which learners construct understanding by participating in the interpretive practices of their communities. The book integrates scaffolding, the spiral curriculum, narrative cognition, and meaning-making into a single account and reflects on the educational reform projects Bruner had helped launch decades earlier. It also revisits and qualifies some of the stronger claims of The Process of Education, acknowledging that the path from psychological theory to educational practice is more fraught than the 1960 book suggested.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The book was Bruner's final major theoretical statement on education, published when he was eighty-one and looking back on six decades
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